Burton returned to Belle Harbour and King’s Street just two weeks later to a day. It was dusk when he stepped on the station platform, and starlit darkness when, followed by a tattered and grinning little darky bearing his luggage, he reached his lodgings. His first act was to throw open the bowed shutters and look out upon the Enchanted Garden. It was a dark expanse of bush and hedge, with here and there an uncertain fleck of gray where the wan light from the sky caught a white blossom. Beyond, the house was empty of light. Something—what the house In the morning he leaped out of bed and again thrust aside the blinds. His heart sank. The Enchanted Garden was still below him; but it looked unmistakably neglected and uninhabited. Most of the roses were through blooming for the while and what blossoms there were seemed faded and imperfect. The blinds in the rear of the Castle rose05 “Have those people in that house over there gone away?” he demanded when the darky appeared. “Which house is dat, sah?” “There, idiot—beyond the rose-garden! Have they gone?” “Oh, yessah; they gone; been gone a week, I reckon.” Burton sat down on the edge of the bed and groaned. Then,— “Where?” he demanded. Bob shook his head: “I dunno, sah; somewhars up No’th. The Colonel he al’ays goes No’th in summer.” “The Colonel?” “Yessah, Colonel Barrett. Wasn’t you askin’ about——” “Barrett!” Burton seized Bob by the arm and dragged him to the casement. “Look here,” he said desperately, “do you mean to tell me that Colonel Barrett lives in that house, the one with the rose-garden behind it?” “Y-yessah, I surely does, sah.” “You’re not mistaken?” “No, sah; why, I knows the Colonel well!” “Then why didn’t you tell me this before, you fool nigger? Why didn’t you tell me Colonel Barrett lived there?” “Yo’ didn’t ask me!” rose06 “Oh, get out of here!” groaned rose02 “No, sah, he ain’ never got mahied.” “Then——” cried Burton in sudden hope. “He got a niece, though.” “Oh! So she’s his niece? What’s her name?” “Name’s Miss Kitty.” “I know that,” said the other impatiently. “What’s the rest of it?” “Ah ain’ never heard no mo’.” “Do you mean to tell me that she has no last name?” “Oh, las’ name! I didn’t know you meant las’ name, sah. Las’ name’s Fletcher, o’ co’se!” “That’s all. Get out!” Bob departed to tell the cook that “Oh Kitty, Kitty!” he muttered, “you’re the cruel one!” rose03 After breakfast he packed his trunk hurriedly and then, armed with the letter, sallied forth. Down King’s Street he went to the first corner; here a half-obliterated sign, nailed against the trunk of a giant oak, bore the legend “Mary Street;” he counted Burton knocks “Is Colonel Barrett at home?” asked Burton. “No, sah, he gone up No’th.” “Impossible!” exclaimed Burton, simulating intense surprise and dismay. “I have a letter of introduction to him. Can you tell me where he has gone?” “New Yo’k.” “And the address there?” rose04 “Can’ tell yo’ that, sah; reckon, though, jes’ ‘New Yo’k’ will fin’ him.” “But isn’t there anyone here in town that can give me his address?” “Don’ reckon so.” “But his mail, where does that go?” “Folkses at the pos’-office lookin’ arter that, sah.” “Oh! And is Miss Fletcher with him?” “Yessah.” “Thank you. I think I will leave my card. Will you kindly see that he gets it when he returns?” Burton tried the post-office without, rose05 “It’s a rule of the Department,” she explained severely. That evening Burton returned to New York without having obtained any more explicit directions than those given by Aunt Amanda. But he was not hopeless. Surely, he assured himself, it would not be difficult to discover the whereabouts of the Colonel and his niece so long as hotel registers were open to public inspection. But at the end of two days he had changed his mind. At the end of the It was well into July. New York had been sweltering all day under hot, cloudless skies, and even the darkness brought no relief. To stay indoors was out of the question, and so Burton dragged himself from an already deserted club after a late dinner and hailed a hansom. rose06 “Drive around,” he directed,—“any old place so long as it’s cool.” rose02 Cabby turned the horse’s head up-town and it trotted listlessly along over the still heated asphalt. Burton leaned forward to catch what air there was and smoked and meditated. For some reason—perhaps it was a glimpse of a florist’s window that did it—his thoughts flew southward to a garden of roses and to a small, graceful figure that walked therein. Fagged by the heat of the long day, he had no strength left with which to combat temptation, and he yielded. It came back to him very vividly; closing his eyes he saw the garden and the blank, drowsy old house; he saw the door beside the rose03 “This won’t do,” he muttered savagely; and aloud, “Stop here; I’ve had enough.” rose05 On the curb he found himself rose04 Burton looked about him desperately. The only course open was to remain in the aisle where he was and trust to reaching the lobby in time to intercept them. He took advantage of every cranny and crevice in the throng and pushed his way through with slight regard for toes or skirts. rose05 “Sir, you are very awkward! You should look where you are going! You have torn this lady’s dress!” “I am very sorry,” replied Burton, striving to wrest himself from the other’s clutch. “Believe me, Madam, I am deeply grieved and—er—— I beg of you, sir, don’t detain me; I am trying to reach some friends who——” “Deuce take your friends, sir! Your clumsiness——” But Burton wrenched himself free and plunged into the lobby, followed by muttered execrations from those whom he unceremoniously thrust from his path. But the delay had cost him dear. The Princess and the Ogre were not to be seen. He rushed to the street door just in time to catch a fleeting glimpse of a gray skirt disappearing into a brougham. “Kitty!” he called, and struggled across the sidewalk. The door closed, the driver snapped his lash, and the carriage rolled away. And yet for an instant he was certain a face had looked from the window and a hand had rested upon the sill. He hailed a hansom. rose06 “Keep that brougham in sight,” he said hurriedly. “There’s a five-dollar bill in it if you do!” With one foot on the step he paused, stooped, and lifted something from the asphalt. lifted something from the asphalt It was a pink rose. The driver’s task was not a hard one. The brougham went northward slowly for a few blocks and then turned to the west down a quiet side street. Presently Burton’s conveyance stopped. rose04 “All right, sir,” said the driver. The brougham had paused some dozen doors beyond and its passengers were alighting. Burton descended, dismissed “Is Colonel Barrett, of Virginia, staying here?” Burton asked. “Yes, sir. Will you send up your card?” Burton hesitated; then shook his head. “No, I think I’ll wait until morning; I presume they have retired?” “Did Colonel Barrett and the young lady go to their room, Billy?” the clerk rose03 Burton purchases roses He went to his office early the following morning, and at ten o’clock, summoning a hansom, had himself driven to a florist’s. There he purchased two dozen and one roses and personally superintended the packing and dispatching of them. His selection may have struck the attendant as rose05 This time there was no premonition of disappointment. He sought the desk and produced his card. “Sorry, but Colonel Barrett and his niece left ten minutes ago for the steamer,” said the clerk. “Steamer!” gasped Burton. “What steamer?” “I’ll find out for you in a minute from the porter.” He disappeared, leaving Burton leaning against the desk staring blankly out onto the sun-smitten pavement. In a moment he returned. “Trunks went to the American Line pier, sir.” “Thank you,” Burton muttered. Then, turning suddenly at the doorway, “What time is the sailing?” rose04 “Half after twelve, sir, I believe.” Burton glanced at his watch, compared it with the smug-faced clock over the desk, and strode to the steps. But again he turned: “I sent a box of flowers here for the young lady this morning; did she get them?” “No, sir, they came just after she’d left. They’re here; I was going to send them back to the florist’s.” That was a wild race against time! With the long box of roses between his knees, one hand on his watch, and a cigarette hanging unlighted from his With a groan Burton threw himself back against the cushions. “Never before in the history of ocean travel has a steamship left on time,” he muttered. Kitty on a steamer “But to-day—oh, damn!” “Where to, sir?” asked the driver, his red, perspiring face glowing above the opened trap. Burton “Hi, sir, you’ve forgotten your flowers!” Burton turned and scowled ferociously. rose06 “I don’t want them,” he said. But cabby, being a person of business principles, did none of these things: he sold them at the next corner to a sidewalk vender for fifty cents. rose07 |